No
Salt was important in ancient times, because importing and exporting before modern transportation was difficult to impossible. Salt was not found everywhere, so if you got your hands on some, you could enjoy or sell it. It was and still is used to preserve foods. It still is a very important item. AS one of the five tastes you are bone with is for salt. You can not live without salt.
The Egyptian afterlife is very different from Christian notions of the afterlife, the latter of which hinges on the assumption of one God who created the possibility of eternal salvation or damnation. The Egyptians believed they could take everything they had in life with them. Death was seen as a state of rest, from which they would be revived and enjoy their earthly possessions in the afterlife.
He was the god who taught humans to grow, harvest, make and enjoy wine.
Athena was intellegent beyond belief as well as kind. She often didn't enjoy punishment, however she could be fiesty when challenged. Her confidence was overpowering to the enemy and she was over-all mature and professional. She did enjoy having fun though her idea of fun was learning, showing off her knowledge, playing the double Flute, reading, and weaving.
Ahm, Actually Sparta has only its LIMITED outsiders that would enter there City. as they allow foreigners they are too strict with it only known outsiders are allowed.
Foreigners were know as the perioeci and they were belonged in the social class between the Spartiates and the Helots. They had a lot of freedom and they had the opportunity to become merchants and trade.
No
Sparta would not let its citizens travel to other cities unless they were fighting
The Boxers enjoyed rising popularity because they were attacking foreigners, and were restoring China to the way it was before it was dominated by foreigners. The Boxers hated foreigners and hoped to rid China of all traces of foreign influence. Postnote: They failed
Unlike the invading foreigners they didn't enjoy killing
freedom
v
slavery
Religious Freedom
freedom
ancient mesopotamians enjoyed eating out eachothers bungholes